TEXARKANA, Ark. | Evangelist Tony Alamo was sentenced Friday to 175
years in prison for taking underage girls across state lines for sex,
effectively punishing him for the rest of his life for molesting
children he took as "brides" in his ministry.

During Friday's hearing, some of Alamo's victims testified
about how their families were destroyed while the evangelist took over
their lives.

Alamo, 75, was convicted in July on a 10-count federal
indictment. U.S. District Judge Harry F. Barnes said Alamo used his
status as father figure and pastor and threatened the girls with "the
loss of their salvation."

"Mr. Alamo, one day you will face a higher and greater judge than me, may he have mercy on your soul," Judge Barnes said.

Just before Judge Barnes sentenced Alamo, the evangelist offered a brief statement to the court praising God, then later adding:

"I'm glad I'm me and not the deceived people in the world."

Alamo's lawyers said they planned to appeal Judge Barnes'
ruling. His defense offered a doctor who said Alamo suffered from
hardening arteries, diabetes, glaucoma and other health problems.
However, on cross-examination the doctor acknowledged he saw Alamo only
once in 2004 and that the purpose of Alamo's visit was to get an eye
lift to make him appear younger.

The evangelist will stay in Texarkana pending a Jan. 13 hearing
in which Judge Barnes will decide whether Alamo's victims will get
restitution from him. After that hearing, Judge Barnes said Alamo would
go to a federal prison that has hospital facilities.

A woman Alamo took as a child "bride" at age 8 challenged the
evangelist from the witness stand Friday to submit himself to God's
judgment. Reading from lined notebook paper, she said Alamo tore her
family apart by taking her as a child bride and described how she shook
uncontrollably when he first molested her.

"You preyed on innocent children," she said, staring down
Alamo, who wore yellow prison scrubs and a windbreaker for the hearing.

"You have the audacity to ask for mercy. What mercy did you show us?" she said.

A moment later she asked, "What kind of man of God does what you have done?"

The woman told Judge Barnes that she planned to become an FBI agent in order to help other child sex abuse victims.

Two other child brides testified. One, who said she is now
employed full-time and has a life of her own outside the ministry, said
she hoped Alamo would spend the rest of his life in jail.

"Maybe the real God, not the God you made up, will have mercy on your soul," the woman said.

Judge Barnes said there was ample evidence that Alamo engaged in
a pattern of molesting younger and younger girls in his ministry.

Alamo accused his victims of lying, as he has done throughout his prosecution.